Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA): The absence of stellar mass segregation in galaxy groups and consistent predictions from GALFORM and EAGLE simulations
P. R. Kafle, A. S. G. Robotham, C. del P. Lagos, L. J. Davies, A. J., Moffett, S. P. Driver, S. K. Andrews, I. K. Baldry, J. Bland-Hawthorn, S., Brough, L. Cortese, M. J. Drinkwater, R. Finnegan, A. M. Hopkins, J., Loveday

TL;DR
This study finds negligible stellar mass segregation in galaxy groups across different datasets and redshifts, challenging previous claims and highlighting the importance of group identification methods.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of stellar mass segregation in galaxy groups using GAMA, GALFORM, and EAGLE data, showing consistent absence of segregation and examining methodological differences.
Findings
Negligible mass segregation with gradients .08 dex
No significant redshift evolution of segregation
Robust results across different group definitions
Abstract
We investigate the contentious issue of the presence, or lack thereof, of satellites mass segregation in galaxy groups using the Galaxy And Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey, the GALFORM semi-analytic and the EAGLE cosmological hydrodynamical simulation catalogues of galaxy groups. We select groups with halo mass and redshift and probe the radial distribution of stellar mass out to twice the group virial radius. All the samples are carefully constructed to be complete in stellar mass at each redshift range and efforts are made to regularise the analysis for all the data. Our study shows negligible mass segregation in galaxy group environments with absolute gradients of dex and also shows a lack of any redshift evolution. Moreover, we find that our results at least for the GAMA data are robust to…
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